Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our HS is changing the XC policy and this year will limit the team to the fastest 40 girls and 40 boys based on time trials that happen the first week in August.
Thats a bummer. There arent really other no cut sports (besides football which is problematic)
That sucks. I wonder how they keep the balance between boys and girls with football being a no cut sport for boys and girls not having an equivalent
Girls have field hockey and volleyball in the fall
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our HS is changing the XC policy and this year will limit the team to the fastest 40 girls and 40 boys based on time trials that happen the first week in August.
Thats a bummer. There arent really other no cut sports (besides football which is problematic)
That sucks. I wonder how they keep the balance between boys and girls with football being a no cut sport for boys and girls not having an equivalent
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our HS is changing the XC policy and this year will limit the team to the fastest 40 girls and 40 boys based on time trials that happen the first week in August.
Thats a bummer. There arent really other no cut sports (besides football which is problematic)
Anonymous wrote:Our HS is changing the XC policy and this year will limit the team to the fastest 40 girls and 40 boys based on time trials that happen the first week in August.
Anonymous wrote:Our school says no cut other than a baseline expectation of being able to run three miles. No speed requirement but you can't show up and expect XC to be a couch to 5K program. The schedule has been released and it looks like a mix of meets just for the top 10 kids and meets for the entire team.
My rising freshman wanted a fall sport and is trying XC for that reason with no expectations. I think being new to something if the team and coach are supportive might actually end up motivational because you'll likely see so much improvement from the baseline you start with.
Anonymous wrote:Our school says no cut other than a baseline expectation of being able to run three miles. No speed requirement but you can't show up and expect XC to be a couch to 5K program. The schedule has been released and it looks like a mix of meets just for the top 10 kids and meets for the entire team.
My rising freshman wanted a fall sport and is trying XC for that reason with no expectations. I think being new to something if the team and coach are supportive might actually end up motivational because you'll likely see so much improvement from the baseline you start with.
Anonymous wrote:Our XC coach won’t allow kids to miss the August practices but it is worth having your kid reach out and explain. If they are a talented runner there might be more flexibility.
Anonymous wrote:It's my kid's third choice for a fall sport. If they get cut from their first choice, they plan on begging the second choice coach to try out. If that doesn't work, they'll show up to xc along with the other kids cut from different sports